- Use iTunes to sync your iPhone, iPad, or iPod with your computer
- What you can sync with iTunes
- Sync or remove content using iTunes
- Sync your content using Wi-Fi
- Use Continuity to connect your Mac, iPhone, iPad, iPod touch, and Apple Watch
- Sync content between your Mac and iPhone or iPad over Wi-Fi
- How to Connect iPhone to Mac
- Connect your iPhone and Mac to sync music, photos, notes, and more
- What to Know
- How to Connect iPhone to Mac Using iCloud
- How to Sign in to iCloud on iPhone
- How to Sign into iCloud on Mac
- iCloud Syncing Options
- How to Connect iPhone to Mac Using Continuity
- Continuity Features
- Other Ways to Connect iPhone and Mac
- How to Connect iPhone to Mac Using iTunes
Use iTunes to sync your iPhone, iPad, or iPod with your computer
Learn how to sync music, movies, and more using iTunes on your Mac or PC.
If you’re using macOS Mojave or earlier or a Windows PC, use iTunes to sync content to your devices. Before you use iTunes to sync content to your iOS or iPadOS device, consider using iCloud, Apple Music, or similar services to keep content from your Mac or PC in the cloud. This way, you can access your music, photos, and more on your devices when you aren’t near your computer. Learn more about using Apple Music or iCloud Photos instead of iTunes.
If you use iCloud or other services like Apple Music to keep your content up-to-date across all of your devices, some syncing features through iTunes might be turned off.
What you can sync with iTunes
- Albums, songs, playlists, movies, TV shows, podcasts, and audiobooks.
- Photos and videos.
- Contacts and calendars.
iTunes features might vary by country or region.
Sync or remove content using iTunes
- Open iTunes and connect your device to your computer with a USB cable.
- Click the device icon in the upper-left corner of the iTunes window. Learn what to do if you don’t see the icon.
- From the list under Settings on the left side of the iTunes window, click the type of content that you want to sync or remove. * To turn syncing on for a content type, select the checkbox next to Sync.
- Select the checkbox next to each item that you want to sync.
- Click the Apply button in the lower-right corner of the window. If syncing doesn’t start automatically, click the Sync button.
* You can only sync your device with one iTunes library at a time. If you see a message that your device is synced with another iTunes library, your device was previously connected to another computer. If you click «Erase and Sync» in that message, all content of the selected type on your device will be erased and replaced with content from this computer.
Sync your content using Wi-Fi
After you set up syncing with iTunes using USB, you can set up iTunes to sync to your device with Wi-Fi instead of USB.
- Connect your device to your computer with a USB cable, then open iTunes and select your device. Learn what to do if your device doesn’t appear on your computer.
- Click Summary on the left side of the iTunes window.
- Select «Sync with this [device] over Wi-Fi.»
- Click Apply.
When the computer and the device are on the same Wi-Fi network, the device appears in iTunes. The device syncs automatically whenever it’s plugged in to power and iTunes is open on the computer.
Источник
Use Continuity to connect your Mac, iPhone, iPad, iPod touch, and Apple Watch
When you sign in to your Apple ID on all of your devices, you can use Continuity features that make it seamless to move between your devices. Click a feature below to learn about it, such as how to automatically unlock your Mac when you’re wearing your Apple Watch or how to use your iPad to extend the workspace of your Mac.
AirDrop: Wirelessly send documents, photos, videos, websites, map locations, and more to a nearby iPhone, iPad, iPod touch, or Mac.
AirPlay to Mac: Share, play, or present content from another Apple device to the screen of your Mac.
Apple Pay: Shop online on your Mac and complete your purchase using Apple Pay on your iPhone or Apple Watch.
Auto Unlock: Get instant access to your Mac when wearing your Apple Watch, and quickly approve other requests to enter your Mac administrator password.
Continuity Camera: Use your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch to scan documents or take a picture and have it appear instantly on your Mac.
Continuity Markup: Use your iPad, iPhone, or iPod touch to add sketches, shapes, and other markup to a Mac document, and see the changes live on your Mac.
Continuity Sketch: Create a sketch on your iPad, iPhone, or iPod touch, and easily insert it into a document on your Mac.
Handoff: Start work on one device, then switch to another nearby device and pick up where you left off.
Instant Hotspot: Connect to the Personal Hotspot on your iPhone or iPad (Wi-Fi + Cellular) from your Mac, iPad, iPod touch, or another iPhone, without entering a password.
iPhone Cellular Calls: Make and receive calls from your Mac, iPad, or iPod touch when those devices are on the same network as your iPhone.
Sidecar: Use your iPad as a second display that extends or mirrors your Mac desktop. Or use it as a tablet input device to draw with Apple Pencil in Mac apps.
Text Message Forwarding: Send and receive SMS and MMS messages from your iPhone on your Mac, iPad, and iPod touch.
Universal Clipboard: Copy content such as text, images, photos, and videos on one Apple device, then paste the content on another Apple device.
Information about products not manufactured by Apple, or independent websites not controlled or tested by Apple, is provided without recommendation or endorsement. Apple assumes no responsibility with regard to the selection, performance, or use of third-party websites or products. Apple makes no representations regarding third-party website accuracy or reliability. Contact the vendor for additional information.
Источник
Sync content between your Mac and iPhone or iPad over Wi-Fi
You can sync your Mac and device when they’re connected over same Wi-Fi network. To set up Wi-Fi syncing, first connect your device to your Mac using a USB or USB-C cable. You then turn on Wi-Fi syncing and choose the settings you want. Whenever your device connects to your Mac over Wi-Fi, you can select it in the sidebar and sync it. (You can turn on automatic syncing if you want.) Your device must have iOS 5 or later or iPadOS 13 or later.
Connect your device to your Mac using a USB or USB-C cable.
In the Finder on your Mac, select the device in the Finder sidebar.
If you connect your device to your Mac using a USB cable and can’t see the device in the Finder sidebar, see If your device doesn’t appear in the sidebar.
Click General in the button bar.
Select the “Show this [device] when on Wi-Fi” tickbox.
Use the button bar to turn on and select sync settings.
Whenever your device connects to your Mac, the device’s icon appears in the sidebar. Select the device in the Finder sidebar to view or change syncing options.
Important: If you can’t see your device in the sidebar, choose Finder > Preferences, then select the CDs, DVDs and iOS Devices tickbox.
You can choose to sync your Mac and your device automatically whenever you connect them. See Turn automatic syncing on or off on Mac.
Before disconnecting your device from your Mac, click the Eject button in the Finder sidebar. The device icon disappears, but Wi-Fi syncing remains turned on. The icon reappears automatically the next time your Mac and device are connected to the same WI-Fi network.
Note: To restore your iPhone or iPad and revert it to its factory settings, you must connect the device to your Mac using a USB or USB-C cable.
Syncing over Wi-Fi is slower than syncing over a cable. If you connect a device to your Mac while the device is syncing over Wi-Fi, syncing continues over the cable. If you disconnect the device’s cable from the Mac while syncing, syncing stops even if Wi-Fi syncing is on. Syncing resumes when you reconnect the device using a cable or over Wi-Fi.
Источник
How to Connect iPhone to Mac
Connect your iPhone and Mac to sync music, photos, notes, and more
What to Know
- On iPhone, go to Settings > tap name >iCloud > sign in. On Mac, go to Apple menu >System Preferences >iCloud > sign in.
- To use Continuity, turn on Handoff on both devices.
- On older devices: Load iTunes on both iPhone and Mac and sync via cable or Wi-Fi.
This article explains how to connect an iPhone to a Mac using iCloud, Continuity, and iTunes. Instructions apply to iPhones running iOS 11 and up and Macs running macOS 10.13 and up, except where noted.
How to Connect iPhone to Mac Using iCloud
To sync your iPhone and Mac with iCloud, make sure your Mac and iPhone are signed in to the same account and have the same sync settings. Then, any change to the data on one device will be synced up to iCloud and then down to the other device, so they’re always in sync.
How to Sign in to iCloud on iPhone
Sign in to iCloud using your Apple ID. You probably did this when you set up your iPhone and your Mac, but follow these steps if you didn’t.
Go to Settings.
Tap your name at the top of the screen.
Tap iCloud.
Sign in with your Apple ID username and password
How to Sign into iCloud on Mac
Sign in to the same iCloud account on your Mac to start syncing. You might have already done this at setup, but if not, it’s a quick process.
Click the Apple menu in the top left corner.
Click System Preferences.
Click iCloud.
Sign in using your Apple ID username and password.
Follow the onscreen prompts to set up iCloud.
iCloud Syncing Options
Data that can be synced using iCloud includes Apple News, calendars, contacts, email, Homekit data, notes, reminders, Safari bookmarks and files, Siri data, Stocks, and usernames and passwords from your Keychain. (You also need to use Apple’s pre-installed apps for these data types.)
Once both devices are signed in to iCloud, make sure the sync settings match. For instance, to use iCloud to keep your contacts in sync, check the Contacts box on Mac and move the Contacts slider to on/green on iPhone.
iCloud can also sync photos between your devices and turn on Photo Stream and iCloud photo sharing. This is great, but the photo syncing options are more complex than for other types of data.
How to Connect iPhone to Mac Using Continuity
One of the great things about Apple devices is how well they work together. Apple’s Continuity features let you do things like answer iPhone calls using your Mac or write an email on a Mac and send it from your iPhone.
Be signed into the same iCloud account on all devices.
Have all devices connected to the same Wi-Fi network.
Turn on Bluetooth on both devices.
Turn on Handoff on both devices. On a Mac, go to System Preferences > General, and check Allow Handoff between this Mac and your iCloud devices.
On an iPhone, go to Settings > General > Handoff > move the Handoff slider to on/green.
Continuity Features
Three of the coolest Continuity features that connect iPhone to Mac are:
- Handoff. This lets you, well, handoff items between your devices. It can let you: transfer a web page you’re viewing on your Mac to your iPhone; start writing an email on one device, then finish and send it on the other; get directions in the Mac Maps app and send them to iPhone for use while you drive.
- Making and answering phone calls. If your iPhone is in another room, you can answer its calls using your Mac. To enable this option, on your iPhone, go to Settings >Phone >Calls on Other Devices > move the Allow Calls on Other Devices slider to on/green. To select which of your devices can make and receive these calls, move the sliders in the list below to on/green.
- Universal Clipboard. When you copy text, images, and other data, every device signed in to your iCloud account can paste it. So, if you copy any text on your iPhone, it’s also automatically copied to your Mac and can be pasted there.
Continuity and Handoff run on iOS 8 and up, and macOS 10.10 Yosemite and up. Universal Clipboard requires macOS 10.12 Sierra or newer.
Other Ways to Connect iPhone and Mac
Syncing isn’t the only way to connect the iPhone and Mac. Both devices include features for sharing services and content to make your digital life simpler. Some examples include:
- Personal Hotspot. This turns your iPhone into a Wi-Fi hotspot and shares its internet connection with your Mac.
- AirDrop. Need to swap a few files between devices? Use AirDrop to wirelessly transfer files from your iPhone.
- iMessage. Did you know you can send and receive iMessages from your Mac? Just open Messages on the Mac and sign in to your iMessage account.
- iCloud Music Library. If you subscribe to Apple Music or iTunes Match, or bought music at the iTunes Store, all of your devices can have the same music using iCloud Music Library. Just enable the option on your iPhone (Settings >Music > move the iCloud Music Library slider to on/green) and your Mac (open iTunes >iTunes menu >Preferences >General > check the iCloud Music Library box).
How to Connect iPhone to Mac Using iTunes
If you have a Mac running macOS 10.14 Mojave or older, one of the simplest ways to connect it to an iPhone is iTunes. Syncing devices using iTunes lets you move music, video, books, files, and other content. There are two ways to sync using iTunes:
Источник